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<blockquote data-quote="RastaLulz" data-source="post: 218581" data-attributes="member: 1"><p>Interesting video, although it's more of a history lesson than a video about the future of programming. Regardless, it's extremely interesting, especially when you hear some of the company names that are massive now, and were just little ventures back then.</p><p> </p><p>Although, the point at the end was thought provoking, in the sense that we learn a language and simply work with that, not learning about how it works (on the computing level) or the other alternatives out there. This could cause issues on the path ahead as we will accept those ideas and not attempt go back to the very core and try to make it better from there.</p><p> </p><p>With that being said, I don't quite understand the notion of telling yourself that you don't know what programming or computing is and by doing so will make you free, as you have a general idea of what it is and how it works.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RastaLulz, post: 218581, member: 1"] Interesting video, although it's more of a history lesson than a video about the future of programming. Regardless, it's extremely interesting, especially when you hear some of the company names that are massive now, and were just little ventures back then. Although, the point at the end was thought provoking, in the sense that we learn a language and simply work with that, not learning about how it works (on the computing level) or the other alternatives out there. This could cause issues on the path ahead as we will accept those ideas and not attempt go back to the very core and try to make it better from there. With that being said, I don't quite understand the notion of telling yourself that you don't know what programming or computing is and by doing so will make you free, as you have a general idea of what it is and how it works. [/QUOTE]
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